New Sound at Saudi Soccer Game: Women Cheering From the Stands

When the soccer game began in Saudi Arabia on Friday, a new noise joined the ruckus in the stands: the sound of women cheering.

In the soccer-obsessed but ultraconservative Islamic kingdom, the match between the local teams Al-Ahli and Al-Batin in Jidda was the first time that women had been allowed to attend a game at a public stadium, a new step in the government’s efforts to loosen gender restrictions.

Saudi Arabia has long been one of the world’s most restrictive places for women, where a combination of religion, social custom and government regulation has dictated what they wear and barred them from driving, holding a range of jobs and traveling as they wish.

But these rules have begun to change under King Salman, who became the Saudi monarch in 2015, and are driven by his son, Mohammed bin Salman, 32, the country’s crown prince.

Prince Mohammed has removed powers from the religious police, placed women in prominent positions they would have never held before and promised to lift the ban on women driving in June.

These efforts are part of broader reforms he is leading to restructure the Saudi economy away from its dependence on oil, temper the kingdom’s religious rhetoric and provide new employment and entertainment options for the kingdom’s large youth population, including women.

Female fans of the team Al-Ahli lined up at a separate entrance in Jidda, Saudi Arabia, on Friday. Women were allowed to attend the public event for the first time.CreditAgence France-Presse — Getty Images

The decision to allow women to attend soccer games — albeit in “family sections” that keep them separate from the all-male sections — is part of these efforts. It also seeks to get Saudi families to spend more of their money on entertainment at home instead of going abroad to have fun.

A former Saudi sports journalist shared a photo of female ushers preparing to greet the female fans and their families.

Women cheered as an announcer read the names of the players:

Soccer is very popular in Saudi Arabia, with many fans of international and local leagues, but female enthusiasts long had to content themselves with watching their favorite teams on television.

“I do not see that letting women enter stadiums is wrong or forbidden,” one user, Manayer al-Qahtani, wrote on Twitter. “To the contrary, it does not go against religion nor against the customs and traditions. Many girls follow soccer and we gather at game time. It is a legal right for us, especially if there are special places for families.”

The kingdom’s stadium had not been built with women in mind, so modifications were made so that they could attend matches. The government’s General Sports Authority said this week that three stadiums had so far been modified to accommodate women through the addition of private sections for women and their male relatives, female bathrooms and even prayer areas.

A photo shared on social media showed signs designating a smoking area for “ladies.”

People began sharing photos of fans preparing to enter the stadium:

Women would also attend a game on Saturday in the national stadium in the capital, Riyadh, as well as a game on Thursday in the western city of Dammam.